Tag: Xbox One

  • Dead Rising 3 Gameplay Trailer

    Photo courtesy craveonline.com
    Photo courtesy craveonline.com

    Capcom is revisiting the zombie genre once again, only this time (unlike Resident Evil), it looks like people are actually excited about more Dead Rising. The trailer shows the new open-world on the Xbox One exclusive as new hero, Nick, makes his way through the zombie hordes.

    The game is true to Dead Rising with the ability to use almost anything as a weapon as well use your duct tape skills and create such mash-ups as a sledgehammer attached to an electric saw.

    Yeah, that moment when Nick threw that bastard at a zombie and clean cut him in half? Sold.

    Dead Rising will release this fall only on Xbox One.

    http://youtu.be/Tn9QRIM4_Oo

  • Halo 5 Xbox One First Look Trailer

    Photo courtesy inquisitr.com
    Photo courtesy inquisitr.com

    You didn’t think Microsoft was going to have all of these next-gen games and leave out their most popular franchise did you?

    The first trailer for Halo 5 shows a mysterious figure cloaked and making their way through a desert until an earthquake stops them in their tracks. A Forerunner ship makes its way out of the sand as Master Chief stands there, fearless, looking rather Master Chief-y.

    Halo 5 will release in 2014 for Xbox One.

    http://youtu.be/9fEKcOK8gno

  • Xbox One Releasing This November, Price Point Announced

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    Microsoft announced today at their E3 press conference that the Xbox One will release this November and will be priced at $499. The screen during the announcement was touting the “Day One Bundle” for reserve. No details were given on what this bundle will include.

    Now we know one half of the next-gen equation. Will Sony have an earlier release date or, even better, a cheaper price point? We will find out tonight.

  • Are You A Gamer? Well Microsoft Says You Will Get An Xbox One.

    Photo courtesy xbox
    Photo courtesy xbox

    It is becoming very eerie how much Microsoft is sounding like Sony from 2005 when the Playstation 3 was announced. They are on the top of the heap and may have developed a bit of big head syndrome. Always online with 24 hour internet checks, extra fees for playing games on other profiles are just the beginning of Microsoft’s uphill battle for next-gen supremacy, but they don’t seem to be too worried.

    Take, for example, an interview with Phil Spencer, Microsoft Studios corporate vice-president had with Official Xbox Magazine.

     “We believe that if all you want is gaming, you’ll still pick us, at the end of the day. The super core guys, they will buy everything. They will buy all devices, but most people really only do buy one device, and if you’re going to think about what that one device is, we believe an all-in-one system that does the best games and TV and entertainment will be something that’s really unique.”

    Now there is some truth in that statement in that some hardcore gamers will pick up both systems, but the statement reeks of taking the gaming community for granted. It sounds so passive like “we don’t need to worry about gamers, they will buy shit on a stick if it has Xbox on it”.

    Do we need to begin a ticker for how many times Microsoft can screw up before E3?

     

  • Microsoft Does Not Own Xbox One Domain Names

    Photo courtesy cnet.com
    Photo courtesy cnet.com

    Cybersquatting is not a new thing. People have been making quite a bit of money off of it for years. Buy up a popular available domain name that may need to be used in the future and wait for a company to buy the rights from you. It seems Microsoft is hitting a wall with the Xbox One in that someone owns the domain rights and has for the past two years.

    One man in London owns the rights to XboxOne.com and XboxOne.net and Microsoft has filed a dispute seeking to get these domain names for their use.

    I am not worried about the whole domain name deal. What I am wondering about is why Microsoft just now filed the dispute for these names. They have already snatched up domain names for all of the possible names we had heard about, but this is the first we have heard about this and it is after Microsoft has announced the name of the console.

    This tells me that the Xbox One name was not decided upon until the event was almost upon us or Microsoft changed the name in an attempt to swerve everyone who thought they had the name figured out. The console simply said Xbox on it and a company as large and well thought out as Microsoft had not even filed for the domain names of their next-gen console? Mix this in with the garble of messages about used games and always being online and it looks like Microsoft waited three months after Sony’s press conference and still seemed rushed into an announcement.

  • Xbox One’s New Buttons Revealed

    Photo courtesy gematsu.com
    Photo courtesy gematsu.com

    The new buttons replacing the “start” and “back” buttons will now be known as the “menu” and “view”.

    Microsoft revealed the new uses for the buttons in an article on IGN.

    “The Menu button (on the right) will bring up context-specific menus which game and app developers can design to enhance the user experience. The Menu button could be used in scenarios such as bringing up in-game menus, showing video playback options, and accessing commands on the console’s user interface.”

    Microsoft also said the view button “will change views or provide more information in games and apps. The function of the View button will be driven by developers. Possible uses of the View button include viewing a map during a role playing game, displaying a leaderboard in a first person shooter, and enhancing the navigation of the console’s user interface.”

  • It’s An Xbox One Cover. Shiny!

    Photo courtesy joystiq.com
    Photo courtesy joystiq.com

    Now is the time when we all start getting excited over the various bells and whistles associated with new consoles since can’t play them and just wait.

    Look! It’s an official Xbox One cover!

    Major Nelson released this picture of the Forza 5 cover so we could get a peek at what the cases will look like for the Xbox One. It’s plastic with a slip sleeve and a paper insert that shows what game you will be purchasing. It says Xbox One at the top with a green background.

    Stop your swooning.

  • A Closer Look At The Xbox One Controller

    Photo courtesy theverge.com
    Photo courtesy theverge.com

    The one thing I did not think Microsoft needed to change was the design of the 360 controller. It is, for all intents and purposes, the best controller for any machine in video game history. The d-pad (even the current redesign) did leave a lot to be desired, especially in fighting games, but the feel, weight and overall ease of use is what is important.

    So they changed it.

    After seeing what has been put in its place for the Xbox One I can say that I am a little less worried than I was. The basic design is still there just with a more flat look from the front. The start and back buttons are still there (kind of). Microsoft is not saying what the new buttons will exactly do. The triggers have been swooped up and look to hold your fingers better and the bumpers have been increased in size. The home button still remains, but has been moved up and separated more from the other buttons so no more accidental fat finger home presses for guys like me. Also each analog has a individual rumble feature to add a new depth to your shaky hands besides all the drinking.

    Finally, Microsoft has gotten rid of the battery pack and replaced it with a rechargable integrated battery like the Playstation Dualshock’s. So no more battery buying and no more play and charge kits that are extremely overpriced.

    Our early opinions of the Xbox One have not been too enthused, but the controller is looking good so far.

    XboxOneControllerAngled

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    microsoft-xbox-one-controller-4947_1_610x407

     

  • Ermahgerd, ErxBerx!

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    Ok, everyone take a deep breath, and let it out slowly as you read.

    In the post-coital glow following today’s Xbox One event, rumors / “official” statements / outright lies are circulating like mad. Of course, if you’re like me, the glow is the less romantic, and more the dying embers of a giant wildfire of suck. The things I say next aren’t going to help with that.

    A while back, there were all kinds of things said about the possibility of the new console being “always on,” i.e. requiring an internet connection, at all times, simply to function. There were additionally things said concerning how the system would handle used games, with signs seeming to indicate that it would not support GameStop’s industry of lies.

    Today, neither of those concerns was addressed directly at the event, but here in the ashes, things are coming to light:

    Always On – The prevailing theory here is that the system will not require an internet connection to turn on, or even play games… for the most part. Several publishers have already indicated that their individual titles may need a constant connection, and streaming services already need that to function. Now, though, comes info that your console will be performing routine connection tests every 24 hours for… “updates.” Of course, no one has spoken directly to what happens if your console isn’t connected for one of these routine checks.

    Secondhand Games – I use this particular term for a very specific reason, and the reason is that certain new functions may eliminate  not only used games, but borrowing games as well. Furious yet? Let’s continue. The function is question is a kind of licensing system that would tie games to your account, like the registration keys that have become so common on PC. You would buy a new game, put in the code, and then your account would have the right to play any copy of that game, across any console. Try and lend it to a friend, though, and they would be prompted to purchase that license, at whatever price the publisher is currently asking. Same thing for used games; doesn’t matter how much you paid GameStop for that disc of Madden 2016, no license, no go.

    So what do I think about all of this? Well, to begin with, anyone who read my predictions about the next generation – and the next Microsoft console in particular – will know that this is familiar territory. These things also go hand-in-hand, as I will know discuss:

    Assume the licensing thing is true. Downloadable titles currently require a connection to validate the license on all consoles except for the one they were originally downloaded on, so that’s not a huge step to take. That functionality would be useless without a way to check the license… so required internet is a given. Of course, you could just elect not to connect in order to play a borrowed / used game, but that would eliminate the ability to play online, and would probably disable achievements. So the console might not “require”  a “constant” connection, functionality, even at the most basic level, could be hindered severely.

    More than players, more than developers, more than threats from high-end pawn shops, console manufacturers have to please publishers. This system would give publishers exceptional control over their properties, and the profits generated from them. As such, if you were thinking Sony would be free from these chains, think again.

    Welcome to the future.

  • Play Games While Loading To The Hard Drive On Xbox One

    Photo courtesy xbox
    Photo courtesy xbox

    The Xbox One will come with a 500GB hard drive and the ability to have all your saves on cloud storage which is good since it is being reported that you may have to load every game you buy onto your system before playing them. Luckily you will not have to sit and watch that painful loading screen when you pre-load your games on the 360 since the Xbox One will allow you to start playing your game while it loads onto the system.

    Games will automatically begin the download to the hard drive as soon as you insert them into the Xbox One.